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Published 20 Oct, 2016 05:49am

Regulators for strengthening banks’ cyber security

WASHINGTON: Federal regulators are looking to set up new standards for big banks’ planning and testing for possible cyberattacks. The aim is to bolster the banking industry’s defenses amid concern over periodic security breaches at US banks.

The move announced Wednesday by the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp and a Treasury Department banking agency is designed to get banks’ senior executives and directors to pay closer attention to cybersecurity, agency officials said.

Fed Chair Janet Yellen has said that cybercrime is a “very significant threat.” The proposal, open to public comment for three months, would apply to banks with $50 billion or more in assets. That would affect several dozen major banks and a few big insurance companies, all deemed to be so interconnected with the financial system that a cyberattack against one of them could shake the system’s stability.

In a stunning incident early this year, hackers diverted $101 million from the Bangladesh central bank’s account at the New York Federal Reserve.

The theft amplified worries about the security of the SWIFT global money-transfer system, which is overseen by the Fed and other central banks. Belgium-based SWIFT, formally the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, is a cooperative that manages the international transfer system among banks. The hackers in the Bangladesh bank case apparently got the money by stealing the central bank’s SWIFT access codes.

Published in Dawn, October 20th, 2016

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